ROME: Patriarch: Modernity Demands Christian Unity

Zenit News Agency, Italy
May 10 2008

Patriarch: Modernity Demands Christian Unity

Karekin II Lauds Close Relations With Catholic Church

ROME, MAY 9, 2008 (Zenit.org).- The Armenian Apostolic Church and the
Catholic Church have a duty to be ever more united in their defense of
human rights, said Karekin II, Catholicos of All Armenians.

The patriarch affirmed this today at a press conference at Vatican
Radio, shortly after having been received in audience by Benedict
XVI. Karekin II and a delegation of bishops and Armenian Apostolic
faithful are in Rome for events through Sunday.

The Armenian Church leader emphasized the positive state of relations
between the two Churches.

Noting centuries of effort toward unity and a common declaration
signed in 1970 by Pope Paul VI and Armenian Patriarch Vasken I,
Karekin II said the current visit "comes once again to reinforce that
warm atmosphere of love and respect which was formed between our two
Churches."

"The love received from our Lord Jesus Christ bears much good fruit in
the field of ecumenism today. Faithful to the holy Church fathers and
their legacy, despite our differences and unique characteristics, we
shall place greater importance on that which unites us," he said.

The Armenian Apostolic Church separated from Rome after the Council of
Chalcedon in 451, over controversy arising from the council’s adoption
of the Christological terminology of two natures in one
person. However, most now agree that the controversy arose over
semantics, not doctrine.

It has since taken steps toward unity, notably thanks to a 1996
declaration signed by Pope John Paul II and Patriarch Karekin I on the
nature of Jesus.

Warm and close

Karekin II said it is "especially pleasing for us to confirm that the
spirit of love and collaboration between the Armenian and Catholic
Churches finds its tangible expression in our times. The living
testimony to the Spirit can be found in the fact that relations
between our two Churches are warm and close, not only at the level of
Church leaders and headquarters, but also among the communities,
parishes and dioceses throughout the world."

The Armenian patriarch said that in a globalized world with its
political, social and economic challenges, "the greater consolidation
of diligent efforts and partnership are an imperative for Christian
Churches. […] Only through inclusive cooperation shall we be able to
better serve the establishment of peace in the world and to better
defend human rights, and the rights of nations, families, and those
classes of society which are at-risk.

"The transfiguration of life through the values of the Gospel shall be
our path to the creation of a prosperous and virtuous world."

Christianity in Armenia traces its roots back to the preaching of the
Apostles Bartholomew and Thaddeus.

The Armenian people converted to Christ at the dawn of the fourth
century, in the year 301. A century later, the monk Mesrop Mastoc
invented the Armenian alphabet so as to be able to translate the
Bible.

nglish

http://www.zenit.org/article-22541?l=e

Shirdel to judge Armenia’s Golden Apricot Film Festival

Mehr News Agency, Iran
May 10 2008

Shirdel to judge Armenia’s Golden Apricot Film Festival

TEHRAN — Iranian documentary filmmaker Kamran Shirdel is amongst the
jury members of Armenia’s Golden Apricot International Film Festival
opening on July 13.

Shirdel was invited by the festival president, Atom Egoyan, to judge
movies at the section of Directors Across Borders (DAB).

`Solitude Opus 1′, `The Morning of the Fourth Day’, `The Night It
Rained’, and `Women’s Prison’ are amongst Shirdel’s credits.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: 3 US Congressmen make statement on 85th jubilee of H. Aliyev

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
May 10 2008

Three members of US Congress make statement on 85th jubilee of Heydar
Aliyev

[ 10 May 2008 15:51 ]

Washington. Husniyya Hasanova -APA. Three members of US House of
Representatives made statement in the Congress on 85th jubilee of
Heydar Aliyev.

APA US bureau reports, Virginia Foxx of North Carolina said when
political strife and economic uncertainty engulfed the region, Heydar
Aliyev emerged in 1993 as President of the Republic of Azerbaijan.
Ms. Foxx named Heydar Aliyev as a strong person and leader. She said
late president steered his country through regional power struggles
and global changes. He negotiated a cease-fire in the war with
Armenia. He deepened Azerbaijan’s relationship with the United States,
Turkey, Israel, as well as countries in Western Europe. Focusing on
the `Contract of the Century” signed in 1994, the congresswoman
reminded that this project played irreplaceable role in
diversification of Western energy supplies.

Don Burton of Indiana said Heydar Aliyev worked tirelessly for more
than 30 years–first as part of the Soviet Union, and later as
President of a free and independent Azerbaijan– to build a strong,
vibrant, healthy and prosperous nation. He reminded that when
Azerbaijan regained its independence in 1991, domestic tensions fueled
by competing forces at home and the disastrous war in Nagorno-Karabakh-
-which resulted in the military occupation of 20 percent of
Azerbaijan, and nearly one million refugees and internally displaced
people–threatened to rip the country apart. Many Azerbaijanis were
fearful that their first experience as the short-lived first Republic
in the Muslim world (1918-1920), would be repeated. `Heydar Aliyev,
however, had a vision for Azerbaijan and opened up the country to
investment from the United States, Western Europe, Russia, and Turkey
and Azerbaijan soon became a pioneer in opening the Caspian Sea to
international cooperation and oil and gas exploration’. The
congressman spoke about the importance of Baku-Tbilisi- Ceyhan (BTC)
oil pipeline and Baku-Tbilisi- Erzurum gas pipeline.

Bernice Johnson of Texas spoke about the role of Heydar Aliyev in the
regional and international development of Azerbaijan. He said
Azerbaijan became the first former Soviet Republic outside the Baltic
States with no foreign troops on its soil. Azerbaijan joined NATO’s
Partnership for Peace Program in 1994 and was one of the initiators of
GUAM. Azerbaijan has excellent relations with Israel and there is a
Jewish community in the country. Bernice Johnson said because of the
late President Aliyev’s efforts, today Azerbaijan is a developing
democracy with a growing and vibrant economy. There are no longer any
doubts regarding the viability of this Republic.

Armenia denies violating ceasefire agreement with Azerbaijan

Interfax News Agency, Russia
May 9 2008

Armenia denies violating ceasefire agreement with Azerbaijan

YEREVAN May 9

Yerevan has denied reports that Armenian armed forces had violated a
ceasefire agreement with Azerbaijan at the contact line with the Azeri
armed forces.

"Azerbaijan’s reports alleging the violation of the ceasefire
agreements at the contact line between the Armenian and Azeri armed
forces is another act of provocation and another lie on Azerbaijan’s
part," Armenian Defense Ministry spokesman Col. Seiran Shakhsuvarian
told Interfax on Friday.

Azeri media reported earlier citing the Azeri Defense Ministry that
"Armenian armed forces fired upon Azeri military positions at the
frontline simultaneously in several directions on May 8 and 9."

"The enemy was suppressed by return fire, and the Azeri side did not
suffer any losses," the reports said.

Shakhsuvarian recalled that Armenian Defense Minister Seiran Oganian
had officially declared on May 4 that the Armenian armed forces had
been instructed not to respond to sporadic fire from Azerbaijan.

Armenian Patriarch in Talks with Pope

ANSA English Media Service
May 9, 2008 Friday 2:29 PM CET

ARMENIAN PATRIARCH IN TALKS WITH POPE

Vatican City

(ANSA) – Vatican City, May 9 – The head of the Armenian Apostolic
Church, Karekin II, on Friday invited Pope Benedict XVI to visit
Etchmiadzin, the Armenian Church’s equivalent of the Vatican. Karekin
arrived in Rome with a delegation of bishops from the Armenian Church
earlier this week and on Friday met with the pope ahead of an
ecumenical service at the Vatican attended by both religious
leaders. Speaking at the event, Benedict expressed his gratitude for
the excellent relations between Catholics and the Armenian Church, but
said that ”there is still much to do to calm the deep and sorrowful
divisions” between the various Christian churches worldwide.

”The road towards the re-establishment of full and visible communion
between all Christians remains long and arduous,” he said. The pope
also highlighted the struggle of the Armenian Church, echoing an
appeal to the international community he made on Wednesday in St
Peter’s Square to condemn the deaths of 1.5 million Armenians at the
beginning of the 20th century during a Turkish campaign of
”denationalisation”. ”The recent story of the Armenian Apostolic
Church has been written with the contrasting colours of persecution
and martyrdom, of obscurity and hope, of humiliation and spiritual
rebirth,” said Pope Benedict. He also noted that the patriarch and
his bishops ”have personally undergone these contrasting experiences
in their own families and lives”. The pope praised Karekin II for
reconstructing the Armenian Church ”with significant pastoral results
over a short time, in Armenia and abroad, for the Christian education
of the young, the formation of a new clergy, the construction of new
churches and community centres, charitable aid and the promotion of
Christian values in social and cultural life”. ”The restoration of
the freedom of the Church in Armenia has been a source of great joy
for us,” Benedict said. On Thursday Karekin visited the basilica of
St Bartholomew – one of the first preachers who came to Armenia –
where the saint is buried on Rome’s Isola Tiberina. The small former
Soviet republic of Armenia is one of the oldest Christian nations in
the world, having adopted Christianity in 301 AD, and is surrounded by
predominantly Muslim nations. The elected patriarch, or Catholicos, is
head of all the Armenian communities throughout the world and has his
seat at at Etchmiadzin.

Football: Ararat battle back to win Armenian Cup

Agence France Presse — English
May 9, 2008 Friday 3:17 PM GMT

Football: Ararat battle back to win Armenian Cup

YEREVAN, May 9 2008

Ararat Yerevan battled back from a goal down to win the Armenian Cup
with a 2-1 defeat of city rivals Banants in the final here on Friday.

Banants’ Bulgarian striker Marko Markov opened the scoring in the 37th
minute but Ararat full back Vaagn Minasyan levelled the scores.

Brazilian forward Marcos Iselli was the hero for Ararat, scoring the
winning goal to enable his team to lift a fifth national cup.

Book Review: Through Levantine eyes

The Spectator
May 10, 2008

Through Levantine eyes;
BOOKS

by Philip Mansel

PARADISE LOST : SMYRNA 1922 by Giles Milton Sceptre, £20, pp. 426,
ISBN 9780340837863 £16 (plus £2.45 p&p) 0870 429 6655

THE BRIDGE by Geert Mak Harvill/Secker, £10, pp. 151, ISBN
9781846551383 £8 (plus £2.45 p&p) 0870 429 6655

The corniche at Izmir had a magic atmosphere. Lined with cafés and
orchestras playing every kind of music – Western, Greek, Turkish,
Armenian – it had the reputation for making the gloomiest
laugh. Though ‘terribly chee-chee’ (i. e. , they spoke with a
sing-song accent), the women were famous for their allure. The trade
in figs, raisins and opium made the city the richest in the Levant; it
had the first cars, first cinemas and first girls’ schools. Nowhere
else, it was said, did East and West mingle in so spectacular a
manner.

In 1919, as Giles Milton describes in this indictment of nationalism,
Izmir Greeks welcomed a Greek army with flowers and an outbreak of
looting and killing Turks. Turkish revenge was pitiless. After the
entry of Mustafa Kemal’s triumphant Turkish army in September 1922,
Izmir became hell on earth.

Milton believes ‘the Turkish army deliberately set fire to Smyrna’
(the Greek name for the city, where Greeks, Turks, Armenians, Jews and
Western Europeans had lived together for centuries). As the city
centre burned behind them, 100,000 refugees or more gathered on the
corniche, praying for ships to take them off. They became the target
of Turkish ‘irregulars’, looting, raping and killing. All accounts
agree that the combination of fire and death, stench and screams was
‘beyond words’.

‘No words can describe the awful effect’ of the wall of flames 100
feet high, remembered an Anglican vicar. ‘Awful, agonising, hopeless
shrieks for help’ were heard miles away and remembered years
after. The population of the city had trusted in 21 foreign warships
moored in the harbour. But they had orders to protect only their own
nationals, British, French, Italian or American. In the end the crews
obliged their captains to take on board those refugees who did not
drown while trying to reach them.

Milton exaggerates the extent of the destruction: some Greek areas and
all the Turkish and Jewish districts – perhaps two thirds of Izmir –
were spared. He also exaggerates the Europeans’ decline in Izmir –
many continued to do business there, living in ‘their own private
little Raj’, until the 1970s.

Nevertheless Milton has gone where biographers of Ataturk and
historians of Turkey, who often want Turkish official support, have
feared to tread. He has reproduced accounts by individual Armenian,
Greek and foreign eye-witnesses, as well as British sailors’ and
consuls’ accounts. It is a much needed corrective to official history.

Few Turks are cited. Would they, if they were unofficial sources, tell
a different tale?

Falih Rifki Atay, a journalist from Istanbul who visited Izmir that
month, wrote:

Why were we burning down Izmir? Were we afraid that if waterfront
mansions, hotels and restaurants stayed in place we would not be free
of the minorities? …this did not derive from a simple urge to
destroy. A feeling of inferiority had a part in it.

The destruction of the centre of Izmir was a result of failure:
failure of different races to appreciate their mutual dependence;
failure of the architects of the Greek invasion, Lloyd George (‘not a
man of detail’) and the Greek Prime Minister Venizelos, to understand
geopolitical realities; failure of naval commanders to react; failure
of the Greek government to protect the Greeks it had been so keen to
‘liberate’. Not until very late indeed did a few ships sail from
Greece and the nearby islands to rescue some of their
compatriots. Greeks either refused to sail or preferred to organise a
revolution. The only heroes on the Izmir corniche were some doctors,
nurses and sailors.

Giles Milton also underlines Mustafa Kemal’s role – still a taboo
subject in Turkey today. Kemal had entered Izmir in a car covered in
olive branches. Thereafter he spent days up in a villa, courting his
future wife Latife Hanim, daughter of one of the many Turkish
businessmen who had profited from ‘infidel Izmir’. Down in the town
three separate horrors were taking place: massacres; the fire (Milton
quotes eye-witnesses who saw Turkish soldiers pouring oil); and the
subsequent deportation of thousands of Greek and Armenian men of
military age into the interior, in theory to rebuild villages
destroyed by the retreating Greek army: few returned.

There was no danger of Kemal being detested by Turks, as the Greek
High Commissioner Aristides Sterghiades had been by Greeks, for being
too kind to the other side, too harsh on his own.

Whereas the Ottoman government had profted from ‘the minorities’,
Kemal wanted to be ‘free’ of those whom, even before the trauma of
1919, he regarded as Turkey’s ‘sworn enemies’. Kemal shows that, if
nothing succeeds like success, it can also be true that nothing fails
like success. The moderniser of Turkey, one of the most admired
leaders of the 20th century, helped destroy its most modern
city. Partly as a result of the elimination of Greek businesses, the
economy of Izmir – therefore of Turkey – languished for many
years. Re-Islamisation, Kemal’s nightmare, may have been
facilitated. If Izmir had retained even a fraction of its cosmopolitan
population, it might have helped Turkey’s entry into the European
Union.

Concentration on hatred between races can obscure equally fierce
hatreds between classes and parties. Was there more hatred in Izmir
before 1922 than in, for example, Istanbul before the coup of 1980, or
19th-century Paris?

Even today some believe that Turkey’s ‘hidden tensions’ could explode
‘just like Iraq’.

When you ask Turks with whom they would rather live – Greeks, or their
fellow-citizens of Kurdish descent – they laugh. ‘Greeks, of course’
is the invariable reply.

Problems of modernisation, and relations with Europe, remain
unresolved. In The Bridge Geert Mak, the Dutch journalist and author
of In Europe, reproduces some of the many conversations he has had,
through an interpreter, with people working on the Galata bridge. It
links the more traditional south side of the Golden Horn in Istanbul
with its more modern northern side. He calls it ‘a journey between
Orient and Occident’. The bridge is a less alluring version of the
pre-1922 Izmir corniche, attracting passers-by, street-sellers and
fishermen. Many are immigrants from villages in eastern Turkey, who
come to Istanbul as there is no work elsewhere. The bridge is ‘one
great wicker work of deals’.

Mak quotes remarks made on the bridge, which reflect the tensions and
compromises of modern Istanbul. Letting individuals speak for
themselves, he is more vivid than many professional travel
writers. ‘All these traditions only lead to more chaos’; ‘everyone is
pretending’; ‘our pick-pockets are the best in Europe!’ Men boast that
‘closed women’, ‘completely wrapped in sheets’, will do
‘anything’. ‘Open women’ are more likely to be harassed or
insulted. Women are most concerned with freedom to work and economic
independence. Istanbul is booming, but the poor suffer as prices rise
and the textile industry moves to China. No one on the bridge earns
more than a subsistence income.

During Ramadan, whatever their feelings about the ‘hirsute hypocrites’
of the mosques, most fast. As soon as the signal is given that the
fast has ended, the bridge ‘is transformed into a huge hungry
mouth’. The rule of the bridge is: ‘keep your hands to yourself –
don’t steal – watch your mouth – and keep your dick in your trousers.’
Glue-sniffing is popular among the young, partly to keep out the
cold. The family is the prime social force. You work for your family;
it works for you. Towards Europe and ‘the West’ feelings are
‘complicated’. Wounded pride and envy are strong, although Turkey is a
well-rewarded ally of the United States and Israel. Yet many dream of
escape from Turkish police and family pressures.

‘My god Europe, we’d love to go there, ‘ says a cigarette-seller .

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Book Review: Exploring Argentina’s ups and downs

The Gazette (Montreal)
May 10, 2008 Saturday
Final Edition

Exploring Argentina’s ups and downs; A land of woes and indomitable spirit

by PAUL CARBRAY, The Gazette

LONG AFTER MIDNIGHT AT THE NINO BIEN
by Brian Winter, Public Affairs,
247 pages, $26.95

As visitors to Argentina and especially its capital, Buenos Aires,
have discovered for more than a century, the country is like a little
piece of Europe transplanted to South America.

In contrast to most of the rest of the continent, Argentina has few
indigenous people, and there was virtually no slave trade for most of
the country’s history. Most of the residents are descended from
European immigrants. Buenos Aires, as author Brian Winter discovered,
"appeared to be a glittering oasis of European civilization at the end
of the world."

In fact, when Winter travelled to Argentina, newly graduated from
university and with a typical self-centred college student’s almost
total lack of knowledge of the rest of the world, the country was
about to plunge into an economic abyss that saw inflation soar to
triple digits, banks totter and fail, and governments get tossed
aside. In fact, at one point during Winter’s visit, the country had
five changes of government in little more than a month.

Still, economic turbulence is nothing new for Argentina, which was one
of the five richest countries of the world in the 1930s before its
economy collapsed.

As Winter learns, "Argentina had been on a hopeless, seemingly
irreversible 70-year losing streak – it was like the Chicago Cubs of
countries. … Perhaps no other nation had fallen so far, so fast."

The Argentinians accept this fact, even embrace it, as Winter
discovers during one of his first walks around Buenos Aires, when he
hears a song on the radio. "The world was and always will be a piece
of s—, this much I know," the lyrics began. "In the year 506, and in
2000 also."

"That’s our national anthem, you know," a woman calls out to
him. Actually, it’s not. It’s called Cambalache, and it could be
termed Argentina’s unofficial national anthem. After all, what
national anthem could proudly proclaim that its country is not No. 1
or No. 2, but not even in the top 10.

Yet Winter falls in love with Argentina as it plunges into some of the
worst years in its turbulent history, a situation he likens to
"falling for an alcoholic at the very moment she hits rock bottom."

Winter never manages to solve the puzzle that is Argentina, although
he does learn that the world of the milongas, the nightclubs where
Argentines meet to dance the tango, offers insights into the country’s
culture.

Winter, bored and unable to find a job, decides he wants to learn how
to tango, which brings him to the Nino Bien, one of the legendary
milongas of Buenos Aires.

He avoids falling into the trap of believing the tango, that outmoded
symbol of Latin American machismo, is a lens through which to view
Argentina. But he does learn that a dance suited for romantics and
cynics seems especially adapted to Argentina and can teach the visitor
something about the people.

Winter meets the denizens of the Nino Bien, such as El Tigre, a
grizzled ex-sailor whose proudest boast is that he danced the tango
with Madonna when that pop icon was in Buenos Aires during the making
of the movie Evita. He takes tango lessons at the unlikely venue of an
Armenian cultural centre and falls in love, at least a little bit,
with a tattooed dance instructor.

But he also moves smoothly from the dance floor to the streets and to
the library. As he traces the roots of the tango (no one seems to know
exactly where and when it originated), he digresses smoothly into a
discussion of the country’s yo-yo history of economic wealth and
bitter poverty, the collapse of the rural economy, and the rise – and
subsequent fall – of the gaucho, the South American cowboy who
supplies one of the persistent myths of Argentina for residents and
visitors alike.

Winter, now an editor with USA Today, provides a glimpse into
Argentina’s soul and writes a love letter to a passionate and proud
country that has huge problems but is prepared to put up with them and
even to laugh about its woes, perhaps to keep from crying.

Portrait of an Oil-Addicted Former Superpower

ALARAB ONLINE

Portrait of an Oil-Addicted Former Superpower

By Michael T. Klare*

How Rising Oil Prices Are Obliterating America’s Superpower Status

Nineteen years ago, the fall of the Berlin Wall effectively eliminated
the Soviet Union as the world’s other superpower. Yes, the USSR as a
political entity stumbled on for another two years, but it was clearly
an ex-superpower from the moment it lost control over its satellites
in Eastern Europe.

Less than a month ago, the United States similarly lost its claim to
superpower status when a barrel crude oil roared past $110 on the
international market, gasoline prices crossed the $3.50 threshold at
American pumps, anddiesel fuel topped $4.00. As was true of the USSR
following the dismantling of the Berlin Wall, the USA will no doubt
continue to stumble on like the superpower it once was; but as the
nation’s economy continues to be eviscerated to pay for its daily oil
fix, it, too, will be seen by increasing numbers of savvy observers as
an ex-superpower-in-the-making.

That the fall of the Berlin Wall spelled the erasure of the Soviet
Union’s superpower status was obvious to international observers at
the time. After all, the USSR visibly ceased to exercise dominion over
an empire (and an associated military-industrial complex) encompassing
nearly half of Europeand much of Central Asia. The relationship
between rising oil prices and the obliteration of America’s superpower
status is, however, hardly as self-evident. So let’s consider the
connection.

Dry Hole Superpower

The fact is, America’s wealth and power has long rested on the
abundance of cheap petroleum. The United States was, for a long time,
the world’s leading producer of oil, supplying its own needs while
generating a healthy surplus for export.

Oil was the basis for the rise of the first giant multinational
corporations in the U.S., notably John D. Rockefeller’s Standard Oil
Company (now reconstituted as Exxon Mobil, the world’s wealthiest
publicly-traded corporation). Abundant, exceedingly affordable
petroleum was also responsible for the emergence of the American
automotive and trucking industries, the flourishing of the domestic
airline industry, the development of the petrochemical and plastics
industries, the suburbanization of America, and the mechanizationof
its agriculture. Without cheap and abundant oil, the United States
would neverhave experienced the historic economic expansion of the
post-World War II era.

No less important was the role of abundant petroleum in fueling the
global reach of U.S. military power. For all the talk of America’s
growing reliance on computers, advanced sensors, and stealth
technology to prevail in warfare, it has been oil above all that gave
the U.S. military its capacity to "project power" onto distant
battlefields like Iraq and Afghanistan. EveryHumvee, tank, helicopter,
and jet fighter requires its daily ration of petroleum, without which
America’s technology-driven military would be forced to abandon the
battlefield. No surprise, then, that the U.S. Department of Defense is
the world’s single biggest consumer of petroleum, using more of it
every day than the entire nation of Sweden.

>From the end of World War II through the height of the Cold War, the
U.S. claim to superpower status rested on a vast sea of oil. As long
as most ofour oil came from domestic sources and the price remained
reasonably low, the American economy thrived and the annual cost of
deploying vast armies abroad was relatively manageable. But that sea
has been shrinking since the 1950s. Domestic oil production reached a
peak in 1970 and has been in decline ever since — with a growing
dependency on imported oil as the result. When it came to reliance on
imports, the United States crossed the 50% threshold in 1998 and now
has passed 65%.

Though few fully realized it, this represented a significant erosion
of sovereign independence even before the price of a barrel of crude
soared above $110. By now, we are transferring such staggering sums
yearly to foreign oil producers, who are using it to gobble up
valuable American assets, that, whether we know it or not, we have
essentially abandoned our claim to superpowerdom.

According to the latest data from the U.S. Department of Energy, the
United States is importing 12-14 million barrels of oil per day. At a
current price of about $115 per barrel, that’s $1.5 billion per day,
or $548 billion per year. This represents the single largest
contribution to America’s balance-of-payments deficit, and is a
leading cause for the dollar’s ongoing drop in value. If oil prices
rise any higher — in response, perhaps, to a new crisis in the Middle
East (as might be occasioned by U.S. air strikes on Iran) — our
annual import bill could quickly approach three-quarters of a trillion
dollars or more per year.

While our economy is being depleted of these funds, at a moment when
credit is scarce and economic growth has screeched to a halt, the oil
regimes on which we depend for our daily fix are depositing their
mountains of accumulating petrodollars in "sovereign wealth funds"
(SWFs) — state-controlled investment accounts that buy up prized
foreign assets in order to secure non-oil-dependent sources of wealth.
At present, these funds are already believed to hold in excess of
several trillion dollars; the richest, the Abu Dhabi Investment
Authority (ADIA), alone holds $875 billion.

The ADIA first made headlines in November 2007 when it acquired a $7.5
billion stake in Citigroup, America’s largest bank holding
company. The fund has also made substantial investments in Advanced
Micro Systems, a major chip maker, and the Carlyle Group, the private
equity giant. Another big SWF, the Kuwait Investment Authority, also
acquired a multibillion-dollar stake in Citigroup, along with a $6.6
billion chunk of Merrill Lynch. And these arebut the first of a series
of major SWF moves that will be aimed at acquiring stakes in top
American banks and corporations.

The managers of these funds naturally insist that they have no
intention of using their ownership of prime American properties to
influence U.S. policy. In time, however, a transfer of economic power
of this magnitude cannot help but translate into a transfer of
political power as well. Indeed, this prospect has already stirred
deep misgivings in Congress. "In the short run, that they [the Middle
Eastern SWFs] are investing here is good," Senator Evan Bayh
(D-Indiana) recently observed. "But in the long run it is
unsustainable. Our power and authority is eroding because of the
amounts we are sending abroad for energy=80¦."

No Summer Tax Holiday for the Pentagon

Foreign ownership of key nodes of our economy is only one sign of
fading American superpower status. Oil’s impact on the military is
another.

Every day, the average G.I. in Iraq uses approximately 27 gallons of
petroleum-based fuels. With some 160,000 American troops in Iraq, that
amounts to 4.37 million gallons in daily oil usage, including gasoline
for vans and light vehicles, diesel for trucks and armored vehicles,
and aviation fuel for helicopters, drones, and fixed-wing
aircraft. With U.S. forces paying, as of late April, an average of
$3.23 per gallon for these fuels, the Pentagon is already spending
approximately $14 million per day on oil ($98 million perweek, $5.1
billion per year) to stay in Iraq. Meanwhile, our Iraqi allies, who
are expected to receive a windfall of $70 billion this year from the
rising price of their oil exports, charge their citizens $1.36 per
gallon for gasoline.

When questioned about why Iraqis are paying almost a third less for
oil than American forces in their country, senior Iraqi government
officials scoff at any suggestion of impropriety. "America has hardly
even begun to repay its debt to Iraq," said Abdul Basit, the head of
Iraq’s Supreme Board of Audit, an independent body that oversees Iraqi
governmental expenditures. "This is an immoral request because we
didn’t ask them to come to Iraq, and before they came in 2003 we
didn’t have all these needs."

Needless to say, this is not exactly the way grateful clients are
supposed to address superpower patrons. "It’s totally unacceptable to
me that we are spending tens of billions of dollars on rebuilding Iraq
while they are putting tens of billions of dollars in banks around the
world from oil revenues," said Senator Carl Levin (D-Michigan),
chairman of the Armed Services Committee. "It doesn’t compute as far
as I’m concerned."

Certainly, however, our allies in the region, especially the Sunni
kingdoms of Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE)
that presumably look to Washington to stabilize Iraq and curb the
growing power of Shiite Iran, are willing to help the Pentagon out by
supplying U.S. troops with free or deeply-discounted petroleum. No
such luck. Except for some partially subsidized oil supplied by
Kuwait, all oil-producing U.S. allies in the region charge us the
market rate for petroleum. Take that as a striking reflection of how
little credence even countries whose ruling elites have traditionally
looked to the U.S. for protection now attach to our supposed
superpower status.

Think of this as a strikingly clear-eyed assessment of American
power. As far as they’re concerned, we’re now just another of those
hopeless oil addicts driving a monster gas-guzzler up to the pump —
and they’re perfectly happy to collect our cash which they can then
use to cherry-pick our prime assets. So expect no summer tax holidays
for the Pentagon, not in the Middle East, anyway.

Worse yet, the U.S. military will need even more oil for the future
wars on which the Pentagon is now doing the planning. In this way, the
U.S. experience in Iraq has especially worrisome implications. Under
the military "transformation" initiated by Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld in 2001,the future U.S. war machine will rely less on "boots
on the ground" and ever more on technology. But technology entails an
ever-greater requirement for oil, as the newer weapons sought by
Rumsfeld (and now Secretary of Defense Robert Gates) all consume many
times more fuel than those they will replace. To put thisin
perspective: The average G.I in Iraq now uses about seven times as
much oil per day as G.I.s did in the first Gulf War less than two
decades ago. And every sign indicates that the same ratio of increase
will apply to coming conflicts; that the daily cost of fighting will
skyrocket; and that the Pentagon’s capacity to shoulder multiple
foreign military burdens will unravel. Thus are superpowers undone.

Russia’s Gusher

If anything demonstrates the critical role of oil in determining the
fate of superpowers in the current milieu, it is the spectacular
reemergence of Russia as a Great Power on the basis of its superior
energy balance. Once derided as the humiliated, enfeebled loser in the
U.S.-Soviet rivalry, Russia is again a force to be reckoned with in
world affairs. It possesses the fastest-growing economy among the G-8
group of major industrial powers, isthe world’s second leading
producer of oil (after Saudi Arabia), and is its top producer of
natural gas. Because it produces far more energy than it consumes,
Russia exports a substantial portion of its oil and gas to neighboring
countries, making it the only Great Power not dependent on other
states for its energy needs.

As Russia has become an energy-exporting state, it has moved from the
list of has-beens to the front rank of major players. When President
Bush first occupied the White House, in February 2001, one of his
highest priorities was to downgrade U.S. ties with Russia and annul
the various arms-control agreements that had been forged between the
two countries by his predecessors, agreements that explicitly
conferred equal status on the USA and the USSR.

As an indication of how contemptuously the Bush team viewed Russia at
that time, Condoleezza Rice, while still an adviser to the Bush
presidential campaign, wrote, in the January/February 2000 issue of
the influential Foreign Affairs, "U.S. policy=80¦ must recognize that
American security is threatened less by Russia’s strength than by its
weakness and incoherence." Under such circumstances, she continued,
there was no need to preserve obsolete relics of the dual superpower
past like the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty; rather,the focus of
U.S. efforts should be on preventing the further erosion of Russian
nuclear safeguards and the potential escape of nuclear materials.

In line with this outlook, President Bush believed that he could
convert an impoverished and compliant Russia into a major source of
oil and natural gas for the United States — with American energy
companies running the show. This was the evident aim of the
U.S.-Russian "energy dialogue" announced by Bush and Russian President
Vladimir Putin in May 2002. But if Bush thought Russia was prepared to
turn into a northern version of Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, or Venezuela
prior to the arrival of Hugo Chávez, he was to be sorely
disappointed. Putin never permitted American firms to acquire
substantial energy assets in Russia. Instead, he presided over a
major recentralization of state control when it came to the country’s
most valuable oil and gas reserves, putting most of them in the hands
of Gazprom, the state-controlled natural gas behemoth.

Once in control of these assets, moreover, Putin has used his
renascent energy power to exert influence over states that were once
part of the former Soviet Union, as well as those in Western Europe
that rely on Russian oil and gas for a substantial share of their
energy needs. In the most extreme case, Moscow turned off the flow of
natural gas to Ukraine on January 1, 2006, in the midst of an
especially cold winter, in what was said to be a dispute over pricing
but was widely viewed as punishment for Ukraine’s political drift
westwards. (The gas was turned back on four days later when Ukraine
agreedto pay a higher price and offered other concessions.) Gazprom
has threatened similar action in disputes with Armenia, Belarus, and
Georgia — in each case forcing those former Soviet SSRs to back down.

When it comes to the U.S.-Russian relationship, just how much the
balance of power has shifted was evident at the NATO summit at
Bucharest in early April. There, President Bush asked that Georgia and
Ukraine both be approved for eventual membership in the alliance, only
to find top U.S. allies (and Russian energy users) France and Germany
blocking the measure out of concern for straining ties with
Russia. "It was a remarkable rejection of American policy in an
alliance normally dominated by Washington," Steven Erlanger and Steven
Lee Myers of the New York Times reported, "and it sent a confusing
signal to Russia, one that some countries considered close to
appeasement of Moscow."

For Russian officials, however, the restoration of their country’s
great power status is not the product of deceit or bullying, but a
natural consequence of being the world’s leading energy provider. No
one is more aware of this than Dmitri Medvedev, the former Chairman of
Gazprom and new Russian president. "The attitude toward Russia in the
world is different now," he declared on December 11, 2007. "We are not
being lectured like schoolchildren; we are respected and we are
deferred to. Russia has reclaimed its proper place inthe world
community. Russia has become a different country, stronger and more
prosperous."

The same, of course, can be said about the United States — in
reverse. Asa result of our addiction to increasingly costly imported
oil, we have become a different country, weaker and less
prosperous. Whether we know it or not, the energy Berlin Wall has
already fallen and the United States is an
ex-superpower-in-the-making.

* Michael Klare is a professor of peace and world security studies at
Hampshire College and author of the just-released Rising Powers,
ShrinkingPlanet: The New Geopolitics of Energy (Metropolitan Books). A
documentary film based on his previous book, Blood and Oil, is
available from the Media Education Foundation and can be ordered at
bloodandoilmovie.com. A brief video of Klare discussing key subjects
in his new book can be viewed by clicking here.

© Copyright 2008 Michael T. Klare

Sources:

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